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Countdown - Jeong Jae-yeong, Jeon Do-yeon; UPCOMING 9-29- 2011 RELEASE
Topic Started: Jan 5 2011, 04:17 AM (1,737 Views)
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TIFF Programmer's Note
One of the most expressive actors of her generation, South Korean star Jeon Do-youn ( The Housemaid , Secret Sunshine ) continues to reach new heights. Together with Jung Jae-young, famous for his roles as angry young men, she turns this assured debut from writer/director Huh Jong-ho into an exhilarating journey through the underbelly of contemporary Korea.

Tae (Jung) is the best collection agent in his firm, admired by his colleagues and dreaded by those he visits. He’s known for gathering his debts by any means necessary, and keeps a cattle prod handy while on the job. Following a series of unexpected fainting spells, Tae is told by a doctor that he has liver cancer, and would need a transplant to have any chance of surviving beyond three months. And so he puts his professional skills to work, setting out to collect a different sort of debt by tracking down the recipients of organs donated by his late son. First among his sources for a liver is Cha Ha-yeon (Jeon), a beguiling fraudster with a long list of enemies.

Locating Cha turns out to be easy, since she’s about to be released from prison. The deal she proposes, however, which includes getting even with the sleazy crime boss who set her up, jeopardizes Tae’s future. He struggles desperately to keep Cha, and her liver, safe until the transplant — even while Cha has other plans.

Jung, one of the most versatile actors in Korea, gives a subtle and moving performance as the seemingly emotionless tortured soul with a dark past. Jeon, who cements her position as one of her country’s best actors, is fantastic as the ruthlessly manipulative Cha.

Countdown , with its wit, style, perfect pacing and wonderful performances, establishes Huh as a talent to watch.

Giovanna Fulvi
http://tiff.net/
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'Countdown': aimlessly fast drama
By Lee Hyo-won

There have been many films in recent Korean cinema capitalizing on the adrenaline rush of cat-and-mouse chases. An ambitious project brings together top actors Jeon Do-yeon and Jeong Jae-young for such a hunt.

“Countdown” remains true to its name in that it sets up a time restriction for a terminally ill bounty hunter (Jeong) to receive a liver transplant from a high-flying con artist (Jeon). It makes for an extremely busy story jam-packed with everything from the hilariously implausible to the relentlessly tragic — but not for a particularly entertaining one.

Directed and co-written by the debuting Huh Jong-ho, the film showed promise as it was invited to premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival earlier this month. Though the big-name stars will most likely draw in the first batches of crowds in the local box office, the shining talents of the lead duo dim as their characters undergo rather odd developments, and as the film finds a surprising saving grace in idiosyncratic supporting actors.

Tae Gun-ho (Jeong) isn’t afraid of pulling off Spider-Man-style feats as he climbs up the facade of buildings to collect debts, but he is forced to accept his own mortal limitations when he is diagnosed with terminal liver cancer. Tae has only 10 days to find a compatible organ donor, and learns that Cha Ha-yeon (Jeon) has benefitted from his late son’s organ donation. He is relieved to learn Cha is set to be discharged from prison the following day.

Things become complicated as Tae realizes he isn’t the only one awaiting her release.

Cha is a master fraudster that manages to swindle hundreds of millions of won in a half-hour even after admitting her fraudulent intentions, and she has, not surprisingly, many enemies.

She pulls off various wigs and props to fool those chasing her, such as a sleazy Korean-Chinese gang boss (Oh Man-seok), a comical, short-tempered version of Kim Yoon-seok’s tragically heartless Yanbian character in "The Murderer" (aka. "Yellow Sea").

Until this point there is nothing unusual or daring in the initial car chase through market alleyways, frightening chickens and the like.
Things get a little more interesting when Cha persuades Tae to help her track down Jo Myeong-seok (Lee Kyeong-yeong), the man responsible for her imprisonment and guilty of even more heinous heists.

In order to secure Cha’s liver, Tae finds himself in one bizarre situation after another. He meets the notorious Jo in Busan, where he operates a pyramid scam involving a “sex posture enhancement” machine and showcases the most jaw-dropping recipes for boilermakers.

At this point, Tae is growing tired and listless, but his desperate struggles are eclipsed by Oh’s droll Chinese-accented jokes and Lee’s crude obscenity.

Jeon on the other hand moves fluidly, looking impeccably gorgeous as her character always manages to be two or three steps ahead to fool everyone.

However, the film takes a deceptive turn as it becomes clear that it is neither heart-thumping chases nor odd characters that are meant to propel the narrative.

Before adopting the title “Countdown,” the film had the working title “My Son” — the action thriller thus turns out to be a melodrama in disguise, one speaking about the virtues of parental love.

Tae suffers from partial memory loss as a result of his son’s traumatic death. Cha on the other hand has a motherly secret of her own that is supposed to add a more sympathetic edge to her character in the tradition of “Lady Vengeance.”

These elements provide interesting plot ideas, but in practice confound viewers expecting action-packed thrills with suddenly having to shed tears through conventional soap opera tricks. As a result, “Countdown” loses track of its narrative direction and characters seem alone in being pressed with time.

A Sidus FNH release, “Countdown” is now showing in theaters.
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/
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